Stag Lee was a bully, he bullied all his life.
Well he bulled to Chicago town with a ten cent pocket knife.

Duke Ellington

1927. Duke Ellington records "Stack O’Lee Blues. He and his band became a permanent fixture at the Cotton Club and made weekly broadcasts from there on radio station WHN. We don’t yet know if "Stack O’Lee Blues" was included in a broadcast.

1928. Mississippi John Hurt. The classic. This is the version that is the most respected as definitive. Beck covers this version in 2001. Rumor has it that there were verses Hurt regularly sang but did not record as they were "unsuitable" for general release. In ’63, after Hurt’s rediscovery, he adds a lengthy introduction describing a robbery by Stagolee and Jesse James of a card game in a coal mine. He insists that Stagolee was a white man.

Gambling's good when you're winning. Gambling's bad when you lose. But a new gambling story is always good to hear.
In "Billy Lyons and Stack O'Lee" Furry Lewis, popular Vocalion blues star, tells us a story of two gamblers you won't
want to miss. On the other side, he sings and plays "Good Lookin' Girl Blues," a mighty good number, too. Be sure to
listen to this record today!

"Billy Lyons and Stack O'Lee" by Furry Lewis as advertised in The Chicago Defender April 21, 1928.